Juan Gris’ Compositional Symmetry Transformations
James Mai
School of Art / Campus Box 5620
Illinois State University
Normal, IL 61790-5620, USA
E-mail: [email protected]
Abstract
Cubist painter, Juan Gris, developed his compositions with at least four types of symmetry transformation. Unlike
any other Modern artist, Gris rooted the radical and disorienting innovations of Cubist space in compositional
traditions of symmetry. Through close analyses of works representative of the main phases of Gris’ painting, the
author demonstrates how symmetry operations were at the foundation of the artist’s compositional methods and
how those methods evolved. Translations, rotations, reflections, and glide reflections not only account for visual
composition, but they also form the basis for Gris’ creative objective of “visual poetry.”
Introduction
Juan Gris (1887-1927), like Pablo Picasso, was a Spanish-born, expatriate artist who lived and worked in
Paris during the early, pivotal years of Modern art. Among Gris’ important contributions to Modern art in
general, and to Cubism in particular, is his compositional rigor and clarity. Gris has been called the
“classical Cubist” [2] and a “perfect painter” [1], acknowledgments that his work in some important ways
stands in contrast to that of his contemporaries. Despite the recognition by art historians and art critics
about the general merits and distinctiveness of Gris’ Cubist works, little has been written regarding the
specific characteristics of his compositional methods. It is Juan Gris’ compositions that display these
“classicisms” and “perfections” so clearly, and various strategies of symmetry lie at the foundation of
most of his compositions.
Gris and Cubism
Juan Gris was born José Victoriano Carmel Carlos González Pérez in Madrid. He took the pseudonym
Juan Gris (“John Gray”) shortly before his permanent relocation to France in 1906. Gris’ newly adopted
name is ironically and perhaps intentionally at odds with his uniquely colorful Cubist paintings; further,
the word gris is both Spanish and French, perhaps also an intentional choice of “word symmetry” to
acknowledge his new, dual national identity. Soon after arriving in Paris, he met poets and artists of the
avant-garde, including Pablo Picasso, who had been living and working steadily in Paris since 1904. Gris
took a studio in the same building occupied by Picasso and others, and in this environment he witnessed
the birth and early development of Cubism, arguably the most radical and important movement in art in
the 20th century. In 1907, Picasso completed his monumental Les demoiselles d’Avignon, now generally
considered to be the first Cubist painting.
Cubism constituted an artistic revolution in a number of regards, including the establishment of an
unprecedented level of abstraction and the incorporation of multi-perspective views. But perhaps the most
important of Cubism’s innovations is that it changed a fundamental assumption that had dominated visual
art since the beginning of the Renaissance: that a painting is a window onto an illusory space that is
optically similar to and consistent with the viewer’s own space. For over 500 years, artists had developed
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and employed a sophisticated language of vanishing point perspective, light and shadow, naturalistic
proportions, and a clear, visible distinction between objects (figure in perceptual terminology) and the
space they occupy (ground), to create a world within, or behind, the flat picture-plane that is
fundamentally similar in appearance to the world of objects and spaces that we experience day to day.
While some artists and art movements prior to Cubism distorted, exaggerated, flattened, or otherwise
made that space unusual, Cubism went farther than any preceding movement in art to dismantle
Renaissance space and replace it with not just an unfamiliar representation of objects and spaces, but
ultimately an “impossible” two-dimensional construction of objects and spaces that cannot exist in three
dimensions (see Figures 1 and 2).
Figure 1: Juan Gris, “Guitar and Flowers” 1912
Figure 2: Georges Braque, “Pedestal Table” 1911
For example, earlier generations of still life painters would represent, say, a violin on a table more or
less as they appear to the eye (or a camera), with all of the visual information necessary for the viewer to
interpret the violin as physically whole and distinct from the table it rests upon, and likewise to interpret
the violin and table as solid objects occupying the empty space of a room, each object visually
understandable as complete and independently movable within that space. That is, traditional paintings
offered information that was consistent with visual data we receive from the world for our practical
interaction with the world: an inventory of recognizable, solid objects that are physically independent of
each other and of the surrounding space they inhabit.
By contrast, the Cubist painter presents the violin and the table as dismantled into a multitude of
rectangular and triangular planes, crowding and overlapping not in any familiar shape of a violin or a
table, but as a general cluster that loosely resembles a still life. There are two critical features to this
Cubist pictorial space: the violin and table are fused together in this cluster of planes, and the “solid”
objects of violin and table are also fused with the “empty” space of the room. Distinctions of figure and
ground are broken down in Cubism, and planes vie with each other for identity and for solidity. The
categories of solid and empty, of figure and ground, of mass and space are no longer stable or easily
resolvable in Cubism. Cubism no longer optically “re-presents” a pictorial space that is consistent with
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our own 3D space, but instead confronts the viewer with an illusion of space that is irresolvable with the
“facts” of our experience of space, and so can exist only in the “fictional” realm of the 2D plane.
It was this counter-logical space, among other things, that Pablo Picasso and Georges Braque were
forging in their paintings during the years after 1906. Gris, six years younger than Picasso and new to
these innovations, would over the next three years absorb the lessons of Cubism and begin producing his
own experimental paintings and drawings. By 1910 he was exhibiting Cubist paintings and drawings that,
in contrast to Picasso and Braque, possessed a distinctively regular geometric organization (compare
Figures 1 and 2), and by 1912 he was embarking on a kind of Cubist composition involving symmetry
transformations not practiced by Picasso, Braque, or any other artist of the time. He continued to develop,
to clarify, and to expand these symmetric compositions until his premature death from illness at the age of
40 in 1927. Despite the compositional innovations that are the subject of this paper, Gris never gained the
notoriety or status of Picasso, either during his lifetime or after. Yet Gris’ originality was recognized and
deeply defended by a number of contemporary artists and writers, including Daniel-Henry Kahnweiler,
the most important proponent and art dealer of Cubist painters, and Gertrude Stein, the American writer
and intellectual who befriended Picasso, Braque, Matisse, and dozens of other artists and poets of the
Modern period. Kahnweiler characterized Gris and his work as “… one of the summits of pictorial art. A
firm hand, serving a pure soul and a clear mind, created the supreme inventions of an ardent
sensibility…” [2]. And Stein says of Gris, “…the only real Cubism is that of Picasso and Juan Gris.
Picasso created it and Juan Gris permeated it with his clarity and his exaltation” [4].
Symmetry and Art
When artists and art historians speak of compositional symmetry in painting, almost always they are
referring to bilateral reflective symmetry with a vertical axis located in the center of the compositional
space, and usually those compositional symmetries are visually approximate rather than geometrically
exact in their right-to-left repetitions. Reflective symmetry is among the earliest of compositional
organizations in the history of art, visible even in the art forms of preliterate cultures. While the
employment of symmetry has waxed and waned throughout the history of painting in the West, it
nevertheless persists up to the present as a fundamental principle of composition in the creative arts.
Owing to the predictability of its side-to-side balance, bilateral reflective symmetry typically carries
connotations of solemnity, formality, authority, and stability. Familiar examples in Renaissance painting
include Leonardo’s Last Supper (1495-98) and Jan van Eyck’s Ghent Altarpiece (1432). Of course,
rotational and translational symmetries were also known and employed in the decorative arts (e.g.,
textiles, metalwork, architectural ornament, ceramic decoration, manuscript illumination, cathedral rose
windows), but these symmetries were much more rare in the “fine art” of easel or mural painting. There
are some powerful instances of translational symmetry as “shape rhymes” in compositions such as Rogier
van der Weyden’s Escorial Deposition (1435) and Georges Seurat’s Sunday Afternoon On the Island of la
Grand Jatte (1884-86), both surely familiar to Gris, but these translational symmetries occur as rather
isolated parts and do not operate on a global scale in the compositions, as had reflective symmetry. So,
compared to reflective symmetry, painters generally seem either not to have been cognizant of or not to
have been interested in rotations, translations, or glide reflections. As we shall see, Gris is an exception.
As art developed generally and gradually towards more secular and naturalistic subjects after the
Renaissance, compositions relied less and less upon symmetry; asymmetric compositions better conveyed
the dynamic nature of the subjects of everyday modern life. Compositional geometry and symmetry were
still taught in art academies, but by the 19th and 20
th centuries, these formalisms were at odds with the
varied aspirations of art movements such as Realism, Impressionism, Expressionism, and even Picasso’s
and Braque’s Cubism. Yet in any given period, there were some artists who, by temperament or by
training, continued to adapt geometry and symmetry to their current artistic milieu. Juan Gris did so for
Cubism in the first quarter of the twentieth century.
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Compositional Symmetry Transformations in Gris
A full treatment of Gris’ compositional symmetry greatly exceeds the length of this paper. We will be
necessarily limited to identifying the general categories of Gris’ symmetry transformations and to
examining those symmetries by way of only a few sample paintings. Further, there are other important
mathematical features in Gris’ paintings that deserve examination, but we can acknowledge them only
briefly in this paper when they are germane to the symmetry discussions. Although compositional
symmetries are vital to an understanding of Gris’ paintings, a full interpretation of any painting must also
include consideration of the complex of subject matters, word-play, illusory spaces, and metaphoric
implications of his compositions and imagery; since these kinds of interpretations exceed the scope of this
paper, the reader is encouraged to consult the references [1, 2, 3].
Rotational Symmetry Transformations. The earliest appearance of symmetry transformation as a
compositional method in Gris’ work occurred around 1913 with his employment of rotational
transformations in paintings and collages. Before this, Gris, like Picasso and Braque, had “disassembled”
still life objects into fragmentary planes and reassembled new and unusual objects by combining views of
the objects from different vantage points in space (e.g., a cup made from a combination of plan and
elevation views). This multi-perspective method became an effective and often-used convention of Cubist
painters. When Gris began to employ rotational symmetry transformations, he added a new method for
disassembling not just individual objects but groups of objects and sometimes even whole scenes.
For example, in the 1914 painting Flowers (Figure 3), Gris presents fragmentary and overlapping
depictions of still life objects: flowers in a vase, a newspaper, cup and saucer, wine glass, pipe, and bottle
on a marble tabletop. Curiously, there are two cups on saucers, two vases, and what appear to be two
tabletops. And some objects have features quite similar to other objects: the leftmost cup, saucer, and vase
are in a vertical orientation and are parallel to each other, while the rightmost versions are tilted but also
parallel to each other. Further, the leftmost cup and saucer overlap both a newspaper above and the table-
edge below, and similarly the rightmost cup and saucer are cut off by apparently abstract straight-edge
shapes at exactly the same respective places at the top and bottom. These objects and their relationships to
each other actually form two views of the same objects, offset by a rotation. The center of that rotation is
the main flower in the vase, located above center in the composition. Figures 4 and 5 show selected
object-shapes in their two rotational positions.
Gris seems to have employed a consistent rationale to this rotational method. The rightmost images,
those rotated off of vertical, carry the shape and shading (“chiaroscuro”) information of the objects, but
not the texture or coloration (“local color”). This creates superimpositions and surprising re-combinations
of objects and their attributes: a “marble cup” and a “marble vase.” Additionally, the shapes of the table
and newspaper that have no textural description appear as empty black spaces, a reversal of figure and
ground, of solid and void. These characteristics are consistent with Picasso’s and Braque’s work of the
same period; the Cubist fragmentations and multiple perspectives imply, if not describe, our perceptions
while moving through 3D space. Yet Gris’ rotational transformations also involve, in a specific manner,
our perceptual motion through the 2D composition of the painting. Gris defines and combines two distinct
motion contexts: motion in the world at large (the Cubists’ investigation) and motion on the surface of the
painting (rotational transformation). The effect of Gris’ compositional method is to offer a larger,
coherent structure to what appears to be a rather random break-up of the images. Rotational
transformation provides the viewer opportunity for a perceptual re-integration that counteracts the
tendency towards fragmentation. The multiple viewpoints and fragments in the work of Picasso, Braque,
and the other Cubists, were not governed by a large-scale compositional method such as rotational
transformation, but instead were ad hoc; the resultant effect of these other Cubist works is that the
fragmentation of the objects is matched by a fragmentary, or at best “episodic,” perceptual re-integration
by the viewer. Gris continued to develop this rotational compositional method until 1916 or 1917,
producing his own elegant and visually unique versions of synthetic Cubism.
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Figure 3: Juan Gris, “Flowers” 1914
Figure 4: Newspaper, cup & saucer,
vase, and table in original positions.
Figure 5: Same objects as Figure 4,
rotated as a group to new positions.
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Reflective Symmetry Transformations with Translation (Glide Reflection). In 1917 Gris began to
experiment with reflective symmetry transformations. Gris was surely well aware of bilateral reflective
symmetry in the history of painting, but his reluctance to employ simple reflection suggests that he held
the view, as do many artists, that reflective symmetry is potentially static. Gris set about to solve this
problem of stasis by combining bilateral reflective symmetry with changes in proportion, scale, or
position. Beginning in 1917, his answer was to combine reflection with translation, making compositions
based upon glide reflection transformations.
One of the first paintings to investigate the possibilities of glide reflection is Fruit Bowl on
Checkered Cloth of 1917 (Figure 6). The painting, more abstract than most, depicts the checkered
tablecloth as a tilted group of rectangles below and left of center. A cup or goblet is to the right of center,
the base of a fruit dish is situated exactly at the center, with the main mass of the fruit dish rising and
widening above that. In the fruit dish, near the top and right of center, is a bunch of grapes, identifiable
from the clustering of ovals. Two corners of the table can be identified at the right and left, near the
middle of each side of the canvas. The composition overall appears asymmetrical, yet closer examination
reveals that a large number of shapes in the bottom half of the canvas are symmetrically related to the top
half by a combination of reflection and translation. Perhaps the strongest clue is an apparent similarity
between the checkered cloth below and the grapes above. It might, at first sight, appear to be rotationally
symmetrical, but is, in fact, a glide reflection. Figures 7 and 8 show the significant shape relationships;
the symmetry is confirmed by the ovals of the grapes fitting neatly in each of the rectangles of the
checked cloth.
Reflective Symmetry Transformations with Enlargement / Reduction. Gris continued to expand his
symmetry transformation experiments, apparently seeking further for ways to activate bilateral reflective
symmetry. Beginning in 1921, Gris developed compositions of reflective transformations with dilation,
making one side of the symmetry larger than the other. These scale changes are consistent with, and
possibly emerged from, Phi-ratio (Golden Section) divisions (see [2] for Kahnweiler’s acknowledgment
of Gris’ employment of the Golden Section). Le Canigou (Figure 9) is among the earliest and clearest
expressions of this new enlargement/reduction reflective symmetry. The painting shows a still life with a
guitar, a book, fruit on a plate, a fruit dish or a cup, and a cloth; the still life rests on a table before an
Figure 6: Juan Gris, “Fruit
Bowl on Checkered Cloth”
1917
Figure 7: Checkered cloth
and other significant
compositional shapes.
Figure 8: Shapes from lower
half reflected and translated
to upper half.
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open window with a shutter. Beyond the window are snow-capped mountains and a blue sky. As with
almost every Gris painting, our entry into the composition is in noticing shape similarities among the
different objects. The shape and angle of the large window shutter at right is reflected in the smaller and
darker shape of the table at the far left. And there is a noticeable similarity between the undulating shape
of the white mountains above and the smaller shape of the side of the guitar. The upper corner of the table
is paralleled below by a reflected, darker shape that can best be described as a shadow falling across the
guitar and table. One of the strongest visual alignments is a vertical division from top to bottom, slightly
left of center. That division is the central axis of a reflective symmetry, where the shapes at the lower left
are smaller versions of shapes at the right (see Figures 11 and 12). That vertical division is also consistent
with a Phi division of a large Phi rectangle (see Figure 10).
Diagonal-Axis Reflective Symmetry Transformation with Proportional Change. In the last three
years of his life, from 1924 to 1927, Gris developed reflective transformations employing diagonal axes;
when utilized on rectangular canvases, the difference of length in the sides of the canvas yielded
differently proportioned symmetrical shapes. Woman With a Basket (Figure 13) provides an elegantly
simple example of this method. The composition is comprised of just over half a dozen large, flat shapes
of color, configured as a woman wearing a tunic and holding a basket. A diagonal axis from lower left to
upper right divides the shapes and lines into a reflective symmetry: The white tunic, combined with the
green leaves and red fruit, form a symmetrical arrow-shape that is proportionally squeezed/stretched in
accord with different lengths of the horizontal and vertical dimensions of the canvas. The warm, flesh
Figure 9: Juan Gris, “Le Canigou” 1921
Figure 10: “Le Canigou” with
superimposed Phi rectangle.
Figure 11: Shutter and mountain shapes. Figure 12: Table and guitar shapes.
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tone and earthy-colored shapes left of the axis are symmetrically matched by the brown shape and the
basket to the right of the axis, but again proportionally narrower in the horizontal dimension than in the
longer vertical dimension. This is a symmetry that is at once geometrically precise and naturally
responsive to the particular shape of the compositional space.
Conclusion
Gris’ symmetry transformations may be understood as visual equivalents to poetry; shapes are ordered by
a geometric “meter” and echo one another in visual “rhymes.” Gris himself offers just such an analogy in
his own writings: “I consider that the architectural element in painting is mathematics, the abstract side; I
want to humanize it. Cézanne turns a bottle into a cylinder, but I begin with a cylinder and create an
individual of a special type: I make a bottle—a particular bottle—out of a cylinder....This painting is to
the other as poetry is to prose” [2]. We may see in Juan Gris’ compositions the enduring, traditional visual
language of symmetry, but expressed with a modern voice in the idiom of Cubism.
Acknowledgements
I am grateful to Prof. V.H. Flach for his original but unpublished analyses of Gris’ uses of reflective
symmetry, including the enlargement/reduction and diagonal axis types discussed above. Flach’s deep
insights into Gris, conveyed to me while his student, have contributed directly to my further
investigations and to the analyses in this paper.
References
[1] C. Green, Juan Gris, Yale University Press, New Haven, 1992..
[2] D. H. Kahnweiler, Juan Gris: His Life and Work, Curt Valentin, New York, 1947.
[3] M. Rosenthal, Juan Gris, Abbeville Press, New York, 1983.
[4] G. Stein, The Autobiography of Alice B. Toklas, Vintage Books, New York, 1990.
Figure 13: Juan Gris, “Woman with
Basket” 1927.
Figure 14: Diagonal axis symmetry
with proportional changes.
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